Recruitment agency promised to bring 150 doctors to Manitoba. A year later, not one has arrived - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, December 29, 2024, 07:27 AM | Calgary | -9.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Recruitment agency promised to bring 150 doctors to Manitoba. A year later, not one has arrived

One year afterthe Manitoba government hired a staffing agency to bring 150 doctors to work in the province, not a single physician has arrived.

Province unwilling to cancel contract with Canadian Health Labs because it doesn't want to waste money

The 'Canadian Health Labs' logo is shown on a computer screen that has a white background.
Canadian Health Labs, a staffing agency that started recruiting health-care professionals during the COVID-19 pandemic, has failed to recruit a single physician to Manitoba one year after it signed a contract to bring in 150 doctors over two years. (CBC)

One year afterthe Manitoba government hired a staffing agency to bring 150 doctors to work in the province, not a single physician has arrived.

Shared Health, which oversees health-care delivery in the province, saidno doctors have been brought overand wouldn't answer if any recruits arein the queue.

Provincial Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara said the lack of progress from recruitment firm Canadian Health Labs (CHL) is unfortunate.

"Obviously it's disappointing that the previous government signed a contract with acompany that hasn't produced physicians for Manitoba," Asagwara said.

The province canterminate or delay the contract, according to a redactedcopy Radio-Canada received through a freedom of information request, but Asagwara said the government won't stop the firm from continuing its work.

The government only has to pay Canadian Health Labs if it delivers a physician, andthe province would be hit with a financial penalty if it cancelled the deal, the minister said.

Cancelling would cost Manitoba

Asagwara said it's unfortunate that CHL hasn't been able to recruit any physicians to date, "but I also want to make sure we're not throwinggood money after bad," Asagwara said.

"We're going to continue to assess this agreement while we take real action andreal steps to recruit more doctors."

The as-yetfruitless recruitment driveis a marked departure from the optimismprovincial officials expressed at a news conference a year ago Wednesday. At the time, Audrey Gordon, the former Progressive Conservative health minister, saidsaidshe was confidentCanadian Health Labswould meet its targets.

The contract, which followed acompetitive request for proposals process, was designed torecruit 50 physicians inWinnipeg, 50 in northern Manitoba and50 in other rural communitiesall within two years.

Canadian Health Labsis the samefirm that's been the subject of a Globe and Mail investigation into its business practices.

The Globe reported theagency charged other provinces a $300-plus hourly rate for agency nurses six times what a staff nurse was earning and invoiced them for daily meal allowancesdespite telling the nurses to pay for their own food. The company has faced political blowback and its contracts have either beenreviewed or investigated in two Atlantic provinces.

The Manitoba dealwas signed the same day in July whenthe Tories publicly announced the "focused recruitment drive."

"Our government is healing health care by bringing more doctors into the province," Gordon tolda news conference.

The contract was amended a month later to state10 per cent of the 150 new recruits must be bilingual in French and English.

The Toronto-based recruitment company didn't respond to repeated requests for comment over the last week regarding its efforts, but said in Marchitputa "significant amount of work" intorecruiting family physicians to Manitoba. The province said at that timeit would review CHL's work but didn't commit to any specific actions.

A person in a blue suit and white shirt stands outside the door of their office.
Uzoma Asagwara, Manitoba's minister of health, said it's unfortunate Canadian Health Labs hasn't recruited a single doctor to the province. The company's business practices have been the subject of a Globe and Mail investigation. (Ron Dhaliwal/CBC)

A month earlier, Shared Health saidthe firm has"assigned dedicated recruiters in a number of countries and is planning virtual recruitment events to offer information about physician opportunities in Manitoba."

Currently on the CHL website, the firm tells physicians interested in the provincethat "diverse practice opportunities, a high qualityof life and the stunning backdrop of Manitoba's natural beauty" await them.

The website then directs users to a button that takes themto the Tourism Manitoba website.

The Canadian Health Labs' job board no longer lists any postings in Manitoba, as it previously did, but the company is stilloffering people who refer physicianswilling totravel to Manitoba forwork a referral fee of $3,500. It's unclear if this offer is connected with the firm's Manitoba doctor-recruitment efforts.

Asagwara wouldn't answer if they or their office has been in contact with Canadian Health Labs.

Doctor shortage persists

The push to recruitmore physicians comes as Manitoba joins jurisdictions across the country in grapplingwith a doctor shortage that could get worse.

After conducting a survey of its members, Doctors Manitoba warned it could loseone-fifth of its doctors about 688 to retirement or relocation within the next three years.

Thispossibilitymakes the NDP government's pledge to bring in100 additional doctors this year a spike well above the the usualaverage all the more challenging.

Asagwara said Tuesday the government is making headway, including through the establishment of a health-care retention and recruitment office, but wouldn't share how many doctors have been hired thus far.

Doctors Manitoba hopes the recruitment agency's limited successdoesn't interfere with the province's hiring goals.

"We have long advised that the best doctor recruiters out there are our existing doctors, who can most effectively recruit their peers to Manitoba," spokesperson Keir Johnson said in an email.

"This involves more coordination and support for physician practices trying to recruit, financial incentives to keep us competitive with other provincesand major streamlining of our recruitment and licensure processes."

The Progressive Conservatives said it isup to the NDP government to administer the contract with Canadian Health Labs, and be accountable for its results.

"After nine months in office, it's concerning the NDP has not provided details on their own physician recruitment strategy, disclosed the number of doctors they have hired, or created new incentive programs to compete with other jurisdictions working to address and fill health-care shortages across Canada," spokesperson Matt Preprost said in a statement.

Manitoba hires recruiter to bring in 150 doctors, but nobody arrives after 1st year

2 months ago
Duration 1:49
Canadian Health Labs, a staffing agency whose business practices have been scrutinized in other provinces, has failed to recruit any doctors to Manitoba halfway through its two-year contract with the provincial government.